Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde
Author: Background Information
Robert Louis
Stevenson is one of the masters of Adventure stories in the Victorian era that
are still great stories of today. He was born in Edinburgh, Scotland on
November 13th 1850 and as he grew up, he travelled around Europe
which he found much inspiration and also a wife ‘Fanny Van de Grift Osbourne’.
Him and his wife both then lived in London and while living there Stevenson
produce great novels such as ‘Treasure Island’ (1883) and ‘Kidnapped’(1886);
which were both adventure novels based on the tales of the sea and pirates.
Then Later that year ‘Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr.Hyde’ was published, ‘which Stevenson described as a “fine bogey
tale,” also came out in 1886. It met
with tremendous success, selling 40,000 copies in six months and ensuring
Stevenson’s fame as a writer’. The novel was meant to portray the link
between civilization and savagery meaning good and evil. By the late 1880’s
Stevenson had become a leading author in English Literature. However Stevenson
always lived a trouble life and continued travelling which he then died at the
young age of forty-four in Samoa.
Plot Overview:
‘On
their weekly walk, an eminently sensible, trustworthy lawyer named Mr. Utterson
listens as his friend Enfield tells a gruesome tale of assault. The tale
describes a sinister figure named Mr. Hyde who tramples a young girl,
disappears into a door on the street, and reemerges to pay off her relatives
with a check signed by a respectable gentleman. Since both Utterson and Enfield
disapprove of gossip, they agree to speak no further of the matter. It happens,
however, that one of Utterson’s clients and close friends, Dr. Jekyll, has
written a will transferring all of his property to this same Mr. Hyde. Soon,
Utterson begins having dreams in which a faceless figure stalks through a
nightmarish version of London.
Puzzled, the lawyer visits Jekyll and their mutual friend Dr.
Lanyon to try to learn more. Lanyon reports that he no longer sees much of
Jekyll, since they had a dispute over the course of Jekyll’s research, which
Lanyon calls “unscientific balderdash.” Curious, Utterson stakes out a building
that Hyde visits—which, it turns out, is a laboratory attached to the back of
Jekyll’s home. Encountering Hyde, Utterson is amazed by how undefinably ugly
the man seems, as if deformed, though Utterson cannot say exactly how. Much to
Utterson’s surprise, Hyde willingly offers Utterson his address. Jekyll tells
Utterson not to concern himself with the matter of Hyde.
A year passes uneventfully. Then, one night, a servant girl
witnesses Hyde brutally beat to death an old man named Sir Danvers Carew, a
member of Parliament and a client of Utterson. The police contact Utterson, and
Utterson suspects Hyde as the murderer. He leads the officers to Hyde’s
apartment, feeling a sense of foreboding amid the eerie weather—the morning is
dark and wreathed in fog. When they arrive at the apartment, the murderer has
vanished, and police searches prove futile. Shortly thereafter, Utterson again
visits Jekyll, who now claims to have ended all relations with Hyde; he shows
Utterson a note, allegedly written to Jekyll by Hyde, apologizing for the
trouble he has caused him and saying goodbye. That night, however, Utterson’s
clerk points out that Hyde’s handwriting bears a remarkable similarity to
Jekyll’s own.
For a few months, Jekyll acts especially friendly and sociable,
as if a weight has been lifted from his shoulders. But then Jekyll suddenly
begins to refuse visitors, and Lanyon dies from some kind of shock he received
in connection with Jekyll. Before dying, however, Lanyon gives Utterson a
letter, with instructions that he not open it until after Jekyll’s death.
Meanwhile, Utterson goes out walking with Enfield, and they see Jekyll at a
window of his laboratory; the three men begin to converse, but a look of horror
comes over Jekyll’s face, and he slams the window and disappears. Soon
afterward, Jekyll’s butler, Mr. Poole, visits Utterson in a state of
desperation: Jekyll has secluded himself in his laboratory for several weeks,
and now the voice that comes from the room sounds nothing like the doctor’s.
Utterson and Poole travel to Jekyll’s house through empty, windswept, sinister
streets; once there, they find the servants huddled together in fear. After
arguing for a time, the two of them resolve to break into Jekyll’s laboratory.
Inside, they find the body of Hyde, wearing Jekyll’s clothes and apparently
dead by suicide—and a letter from Jekyll to Utterson promising to explain
everything.
Utterson takes the document home, where first he reads Lanyon’s
letter; it reveals that Lanyon’s deterioration and eventual death were caused
by the shock of seeing Mr. Hyde take a potion and metamorphose into Dr. Jekyll.
The second letter constitutes a testament by Jekyll. It explains how Jekyll,
seeking to separate his good side from his darker impulses, discovered a way to
transform himself periodically into a deformed monster free of conscience—Mr.
Hyde. At first, Jekyll reports, he delighted in becoming Hyde and rejoiced in
the moral freedom that the creature possessed. Eventually, however, he found
that he was turning into Hyde involuntarily in his sleep, even without taking
the potion. At this point, Jekyll resolved to cease becoming Hyde. One night,
however, the urge gripped him too strongly, and after the transformation he
immediately rushed out and violently killed Sir Danvers Carew. Horrified,
Jekyll tried more adamantly to stop the transformations, and for a time he
proved successful; one day, however, while sitting in a park, he suddenly
turned into Hyde, the first time that an involuntary metamorphosis had happened
while he was awake.
The letter continues describing Jekyll’s cry for help. Far from
his laboratory and hunted by the police as a murderer, Hyde needed Lanyon’s
help to get his potions and become Jekyll again—but when he undertook the
transformation in Lanyon’s presence, the shock of the sight instigated Lanyon’s
deterioration and death. Meanwhile, Jekyll returned to his home, only to find
himself ever more helpless and trapped as the transformations increased in
frequency and necessitated even larger doses of potion in order to reverse
themselves. It was the onset of one of these spontaneous metamorphoses that
caused Jekyll to slam his laboratory window shut in the middle of his
conversation with Enfield and Utterson. Eventually, the potion began to run
out, and Jekyll was unable to find a key ingredient to make more. His ability to
change back from Hyde into Jekyll slowly vanished. Jekyll writes that even as
he composes his letter he knows that he will soon become Hyde permanently, and
he wonders if Hyde will face execution for his crimes or choose to kill
himself. Jekyll notes that, in any case, the end of his letter marks the end of
the life of Dr. Jekyll. With these words, both the document and the novel come
to a close.’ – (http://www.sparknotes.com/lit/jekyll/summary.html)
Amelia Richmond-Knight
Amelia Richmond-Knight
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